Forum Moderators: martinibuster
SEOGrrl
Targeting should show different ads for mor targeted phrases.
For example,
widget A very general term, brings the widest range of ads, often with a higher EPC because of greater competition for the term.
Blue Widget A little more specific term should draw a narrower range of ads which might well have a lower EPC because of less competition. CTR might be higher though, because the ad more closely relates to the page topic.
Antique Blue Widgets An even more specific term should draw an even narrower range of ads. Most likely, because of less competition for the term, these ads will pay even less per click, but should also generate an even higher EPC.
Antique Blue (manufactures name) Widgets Now we are really getting spcific. The result will be even much narrower range of ads, most likely with an even lower EPC and higher CTR.
The home page problem might be related to the nature of homepages themselves. Quite often homepages end up being pretty general in scope, depending on the how broadly the subject of the website is covered.
Home pages also sometimes seem to set the "Theme" of the ads thatare shown on the rest of the site. That might seem logical, but it can lead to problems with targeting.
I had a similar problem and ended up removing adsense from my homepage, which seemed to help the ad targeting for the rest of the site.
I suspect that the homepage issues are more problematic the larger a site is.
Watching the areas through the channels is indeed an option, thanks for bringing that up!
SEOGrrl
On one of my sites, I was getting a high $x.xx almost $xx.xx per click. But this site didn'have adsense on the home page. Once I added it on the homepage the cpc dropped to $.xx per click. When I took the ads off the homepage it went back to a high $x.xx.
The people who get these $x.xx EPCs must be in very competitive (in the online-adv sense) markets.
The test site I run Adsense on, gets B2B-type ads from companies, some small, some bigger (e.g. "Bayer Polymers") and still a dozen clicks earns less than one click of yours. Same with non-english content (german, french, italian, spanish).
I think it's a supply-demand thing, because just a couple of advertisers appear next to Google's own search results. So basically these advertisers are getting a free ride.
Oh well... I'd better go setup a Viagra site with subsections on anti-martingale bet-sizing strategies (to cater to the casino / betting folks) <grin>
I have a few sites with extremely competitive areas but the clicks are only $.xx. Obviously the advertiser that is getting 7k for selling one widget will be more likely to pay $x.xx or even $xx.xx depending on their conversion rate.
SEOGrrl